Celia Szusterman is the director of the Latin America Programme at the Institute for Statecraft. She was principal lecturer in Spanish and Latin American studies at the University of Westminster; is a senior member of St Antony's College, Oxford; associate fellow of the Institute for the Study of the Americas, University of London; and a trustee of the UK board of Pro-Mujer. Her publications include Frondizi and the Politics of Developmentalism in Argentina, 1955-62 (Macmillan/University of Pittsburgh Press, 1993), revised as Frondizi o la política del desconcierto (Emecé Argentina, 1996); and “‘Que se Vayan Todos!’ The Struggle for Democratic Party Politics in Contemporary Argentina”, in Paul Webb & Stephen White, eds., Party Politics in New Democracies [Oxford University Press, 2007])
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Published in: HomeDefault or not default? That is the (Argentine) question...
Argentina's president, Cristina Kirchner, refuses to accept that the country has defaulted on its debts. But her...
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Published in: HomeAn Argentine fable: Cristina Kirchner's tall stories
The successive presidencies of the Kirchner couple, Néstor and now his widow Cristina, have led Argentina since the...
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Published in: HomeArgentina’s energy politics: context of crisis
The decision of Argentina’s president to take a controlling stake in the country’s main oil company by outright...
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Published in: HomeArgentina: democracy by default
The successive presidencies of Néstor and Cristina Kirchner are marked by a determined effort to put the state and...
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Published in: HomeArgentina y las Malvinas: in search of reality
The revival of Argentina’s dispute with Britain over the south Atlantic island territory owes much to the political...
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